Tissue Paper Rope Art

Tissue Paper Rope Art

Steps:

  • Use both hands to tear the tissue paper into long strips (about 1 inch wide). Place the finished strips in the plastic container.
  • Take one strip. Hold one end steady with your helper hand. Use your dominant hand to twist the paper tightly. Turn it into a stiff, resistant rope.
  • Use a marker to draw a simple shape or a winding path onto the construction paper base.
  • Squeeze the glue bottle to trace a thick line of glue over the marker path.
  • Carefully press the twisted paper rope onto the wet glue line. Continue twisting and gluing until the entire path is filled with the colorful rope.

Safety Tip:
Constant and direct adult supervision is required. Small pieces of tissue paper, if crumbled tightly, can be a choking hazard for children who still place objects in their mouths. Ensure materials are used only as intended.

Paper Nugget Transfer Challenge

Paper Nugget Transfer Challenge

Steps:

  • Tear the construction paper into small strips using both hands together.
  • Use only your fingertips to crumple each strip tightly into a dense, hard paper ‘nugget.’ Squeeze hard for maximum strength input!
  • Place the finished nuggets on the table. Set the paper cup nearby as your target.
  • Hold the paper cup steady with your helper hand to keep it stable.
  • Pick up the tongs. Squeeze them open with a strong finger pinch to grab one paper nugget.
  • Carefully transfer the nugget and drop it precisely into the waiting paper cup target. Repeat until all nuggets are sorted.

Safety Tip:
Constant and direct adult supervision is required. The small, crumpled paper pieces pose a potential choking hazard for children who still place objects in their mouths. Ensure materials are collected immediately after play.

Vertical Tear & Crumple Press

Vertical Tear & Crumple Press

Steps:

  • Secure the cardboard piece vertically onto a stable wall or door using masking tape.
  • Use long strips of masking tape, sticky side OUT, to create a large shape (like a circle or square) onto the cardboard surface.
  • Give your toddler strips of construction paper. Encourage them to use both hands to tear the paper into small, rough pieces.
  • Challenge your child to crumple each torn piece tightly into a small, dense ball using only their fingertips.
  • Hold the cardboard steady with the helper hand. Pick up one dense paper ball using a pincer grasp.
  • Use a strong, controlled push to firmly press the paper ball onto the vertical sticky tape shape. Repeat until the shape is covered.

Safety Tip:
Constant and direct adult supervision is required. Torn paper pieces are a choking hazard for children under three. Ensure your child remains standing or sitting stably and does not attempt to put materials in their mouth.

Paper Crumple Pin Push

Paper Crumple Pin Push

Steps:

  • Tear the construction paper into small pieces. Encourage your child to crumple these pieces tightly into dense, hard balls using both hands.
  • Spread a thick layer of glue or use masking tape loops to secure the crumpled paper balls onto the cardboard base, covering the surface completely. Let it dry to create a resistant layer.
  • Place the finished board on a stable table. Hold the cardboard base firmly steady with your helper hand. This is important for proximal stability.
  • Pick up one Q-Tip using a neat pincer grasp (thumb and pointer finger). Aim the Q-Tip at the resistant paper layer.
  • Challenge your child to use a strong, controlled push to pierce the Q-Tip straight through the dense paper. Feel the heavy work input!
  • Repeat this pushing action until the entire board is filled with Q-Tip ‘pins.’
  • Use a precise pincer grasp to place a pom-pom onto the top of each Q-Tip stem for decoration.

Safety Tip:
Constant and direct adult supervision is required. Q-Tips and small pom-poms are choking hazards for children who still place objects in their mouths. Ensure materials are used only as intended and collected immediately after play.

Foil Sculpture Clip Art

Foil Sculpture Clip Art

Steps:

  • Give your child a large sheet of aluminum foil. Encourage them to use both hands to tear the foil into smaller pieces.
  • Challenge them to crumple and squeeze the foil pieces tightly. Focus on making dense, rock-hard 3D shapes.
  • Adults can use scissors to cut small shapes or strips from the construction paper. Glue these shapes onto the ends of the clothespins.
  • Place the foil sculpture on the table. Hold the foil sculpture steady with your helper hand.
  • Use your dominant hand to pinch open a clothespin. Clip the decorative paper firmly onto the resistant foil surface.
  • Continue clipping the clothespins onto the stiff foil until the entire sculpture is covered in color.

Safety Tip:
Constant and direct adult supervision is required. Ensure children crumple the foil tightly to avoid sharp edges. Collect all small foil pieces immediately after play.